Increased variability in reaction time is associated with amyloid beta pathology at age 70

Alzheimers Dement (Amst). 2020 Aug 10;12(1):e12076. doi: 10.1002/dad2.12076. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

Introduction: We investigated whether life-course factors and neuroimaging biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease pathology predict reaction time (RT) performance in older adults.

Methods: Insight 46 study participants, all born in the same week in 1946 (n = 501; ages at assessment = 69 to 71 years), completed a 2-choice RT task and amyloid beta (Aβ) positron emission tomography and MR imaging. We tested for associations between task outcomes (RT; error rate; intra-individual variability in RT) and life-course predictors including childhood cognitive ability and education. In a subsample of 406 cognitively normal participants, we investigated associations between task outcomes and biomarkers including Aβ-positivity.

Results: Cognitively normal Aβ-positive participants had 10% more variable RTs than Aβ-negative participants, despite having similar mean RTs. Childhood cognitive ability and education independently predicted task performance.

Discussion: This study provides novel evidence that Aβ pathology is associated with poorer consistency of RT in cognitively normal older adults, at an age when dementia prevalence is still very low.

Keywords: amyloid‐positron emission tomography imaging; birth cohort; cognition; cognitive decline; dementia; healthy aging; preclinical Alzheimer's disease; reaction time; variability.